UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — OriginLabs, Invent Penn State’s all-new prototyping and product development facility located in the Eric J. Barron Innovation Hub was recently awarded an Appalachian Regional Commission grant of $750,087 that was matched 1:1 by the University, for a total of $1.5 million to fund the purchase of key equipment and delivery of free workshop programming.
“As Pennsylvania’s land-grant institution, we have a unique responsibility to serve the commonwealth,” said James Delattre, associate vice president for research and director of the Office of Entrepreneurship and Commercialization. “This generous grant from ARC will allow us to further that service mission with new equipment and training opportunities that ensure that our region has a future-ready workforce.”
OriginLabs provides students, faculty, and community entrepreneurs with access to cutting-edge machinery and the latest in rapid prototyping technology.
The facility encompasses roughly 7,000 square feet across two floors and allows users to design, prototype and test potential solutions for their startups. The well-appointed facilities give users access to a breadth of materials and methodologies for production, including woodworking, metalworking, digital fabrication and additive manufacturing.
This award is part of a recently announced nearly $47 million package supporting 52 projects in 181 coal-impacted counties through ARC’s POWER (Partnerships for Opportunity and Workforce and Economic Revitalization) Initiative, which directs federal resources to economic diversification projects in Appalachian communities affected by job losses in coal mining, coal power plant operations, and coal-related supply chain industries. This is the largest single POWER awards package to date since the initiative launched in 2015.
“This grant will further enable us to expand our workforce development efforts in areas where we are advancing research so that the next generation workforce is highly skilled in these advanced technologies,” said Senior Vice President for Research Lora Weiss. “The work at OriginLabs will help accelerate the pace at which technologies move from research ideas and discovery to implementation by providing technical skills and capabilities not widely accessible elsewhere.”
The ARC grant will go toward purchasing multiple collaborative robotic arms, various 3D printing technologies, and laser scanning equipment. OriginLabs Director Ryan Mandell says the grant will also support delivery of 10 free workshops each year centered on automation, additive manufacturing, and AR/VR for “smart factory” environments utilizing the new equipment.